Vegetable sides often get treated like the part of dinner everyone takes out of obligation, then leaves behind. These 21 recipes put texture, browning, smoke, herbs, cheese, and bright dressings to work so the produce carries the plate instead of fading beside the main dish. The collection spans quick salads, roasted roots, grilled vegetables, creamy classics, and slower-cooked options for larger menus. You get sides for weeknights, cookouts, holiday dinners, and meals where the vegetables deserve more than an afterthought.

Roasted Green Beans with Almonds and Lemon

Ready in 20 minutes for four servings, Roasted Green Beans with Almonds and Lemon turn fresh beans into a crisp-edged side with very little fuss. Olive oil helps the beans blister in the oven, while toasted sliced almonds add crunch and fresh lemon juice and zest keep the finish bright. Put this beside roast chicken, salmon, steak, pasta, or a holiday main when plain steamed beans will not carry enough flavor.
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Smoked Asparagus

With an hour of low-temperature cooking after 10 minutes of prep, Smoked Asparagus gives four servings a gentle smoky edge without burying the vegetable. The spears need only olive oil, salt, and black pepper before going into a grill basket at 225°F. Use this side when the smoker is already running for chicken, beef, pork, or seafood, since it fills spare grate space and keeps the whole meal outdoors.
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Brussels Sprouts with Brown Butter & Almonds

Finished in 20 minutes for four servings, Brussels Sprouts with Brown Butter & Almonds pair tender-crisp sprouts with toasted almonds and nutty browned butter. The recipe briefly boils the fresh sprouts, then uses the same pan to toast the nuts and brown the butter, which keeps cleanup contained. Serve it with a roast, smoked meat, or a holiday spread, and keep the components separate until reheating when making it ahead.
Get the Recipe: Brussels Sprouts with Brown Butter & Almonds
Texas Corn Succotash

Built to serve eight in 25 minutes, Texas Corn Succotash combines six cups of corn with bacon, jalapeño, onion, red bell pepper, garlic, and butter. Fresh or frozen corn both work, and the vegetables cook in the skillet after the bacon and aromatics have started. This is the side to bring to a cookout, Tex-Mex dinner, or potluck when a bowl of corn needs enough color, heat, and texture to stand beside grilled food.
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Smoked Spaghetti Squash

After 30 minutes at low smoke and another 50 to 60 minutes at higher heat, Smoked Spaghetti Squash produces four servings of fork-tender strands. The base recipe uses one spaghetti squash with olive oil, salt, and black pepper, leaving room for garlic butter, Parmesan and herbs, or marinara at the table. Pair it with smoked chicken, shrimp, or tri-tip when you want the vegetable side to match the cooking method of the main dish.
Get the Recipe: Smoked Spaghetti Squash
Air Fryer Corn on The Cob

In 20 minutes, Air Fryer Corn on The Cob cooks four shucked ears with olive oil, salt, and black pepper at 400°F. Turning the cobs halfway through gives the kernels even roasting without heating a grill or boiling a large pot of water. Add butter, chili powder, lime, or chipotle powder after cooking, then serve it with chicken, meatballs, or a cookout plate when outdoor grilling is not practical.
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Beet Salad with Goat Cheese and Walnuts

Roasted beets give Beet Salad with Goat Cheese and Walnuts its base, while mixed greens, crumbled goat cheese, toasted walnuts, and fresh dill build the rest of the four-serving salad. A balsamic vinaigrette with honey and Dijon ties the ingredients together, and the full recipe takes 1 hour 5 minutes. Roast the beets a day ahead for easier assembly, then serve the salad with chicken, salmon, steak, soup, or crusty bread.
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Shirazi Salad

Chopped and dressed in 10 minutes, Shirazi Salad makes eight servings from Roma tomatoes, English cucumber, red onion, mint, parsley, dill, lime juice, and olive oil. The small dice lets the herbs and dressing reach every bite, while seeding the tomatoes helps prevent a watery bowl. Set it beside grilled or smoked food, Mediterranean dishes, or warm bread when dinner needs a cool side with no oven time.
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Baked Acorn Squash with Maple Syrup

Roasted until fork-tender, Baked Acorn Squash with Maple Syrup serves four with two squash, olive oil, maple syrup, salt, and black pepper. The halves bake at 425°F and are basted midway so the maple mixture coats the flesh instead of staying pooled in the center. Count on about 40 minutes of cooking, then place it beside roast chicken, grilled steak, a salad, or a holiday plate that needs a naturally sweet vegetable.
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Fried Tomatillos

Ready in 15 minutes for four servings, Fried Tomatillos coat thick tomatillo slices in flour, cornmeal, cumin, turmeric, garlic powder, onion powder, egg, and milk before shallow-frying. The accompanying aioli blends mayonnaise with cilantro, jalapeño, lime, garlic, and cumin. Serve the crisp slices immediately as a side or appetizer with sandwiches, quesadillas, pork, or steak, since the coating is at its best straight from the skillet.
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Carrots au Gratin

Serving six in 30 minutes, Carrots au Gratin cover parboiled baby carrots with a thickened broth sauce flavored with shallot, lemon, and Dijon. A topping of torn white bread, Parmesan, horseradish, thyme, and butter browns as the dish bakes. It gives carrots enough structure for roast dinners and holiday menus, and the carrots and sauce can be prepared up to two days ahead before the crumb topping is added.
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Air Fryer Sweet Potato Cubes

Seasoned with cumin, smoked paprika, garlic powder, onion powder, and paprika, Air Fryer Sweet Potato Cubes turn one pound of peeled sweet potatoes into four servings in 18 minutes. The one-inch pieces cook at 400°F, with a stir after the first five minutes to support even browning. Use them beside seafood, chicken, pork, roast beef, or a holiday main when mashed sweet potatoes would be too heavy or require more cleanup.
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Honey Roasted Baby Carrots

Coated in honey, olive oil, melted butter, salt, and garlic powder, Honey Roasted Baby Carrots roast into four servings with caramelized edges. The recipe takes 45 minutes and works with standard baby carrots or rainbow carrots for added color. Serve them with chicken, pork, fish, stuffing, or mashed potatoes, and keep any leftovers for salads or grain bowls when you need a vegetable that works beyond the first dinner.
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German Kohlrabi

On the table in 15 minutes, German Kohlrabi simmers one pound of diced kohlrabi until tender, then coats it in a sauce made from butter, flour, milk, garlic powder, and onion powder. The recipe serves four and can be prepared ahead, chilled, and reheated gently before dinner. Put it next to steak, roasted chicken, fish, smoked pork loin, or a grain salad when a less familiar vegetable needs an uncomplicated introduction.
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Grilled Ratatouille

Grilled in 20 minutes for four servings, Grilled Ratatouille layers eggplant, zucchini, bell peppers, red onion, and cherry tomatoes with garlic, olive oil, and thyme. The tomatoes go onto skewers while the larger vegetables cook directly on the grates, so each ingredient gets the time it needs. Serve the platter warm with fish or chicken, or turn it into a lighter main with couscous, orzo, quinoa, or crusty bread.
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Italian Broccoli Salad

After 10 minutes of prep and a brief blanch, Italian Broccoli Salad serves six with broccoli, almonds, pepperoncini, red bell pepper, olives, shallot, and cubes of provolone. Olive oil and red wine vinegar replace a mayonnaise-heavy dressing, and a 10-minute rest lets the broccoli absorb the seasoning. Make it for picnics, meal prep, sandwiches, or grilled dinners, since the salad can be served chilled or at room temperature.
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Grilled Vegetables

Marinated before a fast 10-minute cook, Grilled Vegetables combine zucchini, summer squash, red onion, mushrooms, eggplant, and bell peppers for four servings. Italian dressing supplies the seasoning, and the vegetables cook hot and fast on a Ninja Woodfire Grill after up to an hour of marinating. Use the platter with grilled fish, steak, or chicken, or fold leftovers into pasta when one batch of vegetables needs to cover more than one meal.
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Mediterranean Zucchini with Feta and herbs

Roasted in 35 minutes for four servings, Mediterranean Zucchini with Feta and herbs combines zucchini spears with olive oil, oregano, garlic powder, sliced shallot, feta, and fresh parsley. The zucchini cooks cut side down at 425°F for stronger browning, then gets the cheese and herbs after leaving the oven. Serve it warm or at room temperature beside chicken, lamb, salmon, pasta, couscous, or quinoa.
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Grilled Cauliflower Steaks

Brushed with herb oil and grilled in 20 minutes, Grilled Cauliflower Steaks make four servings from one head of cauliflower. Olive oil, dried herbs, onion powder, garlic powder, red pepper flakes, and lemon give the thick slices their seasoning from edge to core. Keep the core intact while cutting so the steaks hold together, then serve them with burgers, smoked chicken, or other grilled mains, using chopped leftovers in salad the next day.
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Greek Green Beans

Slowly braised for 45 minutes, Greek Green Beans serve four with green beans, potatoes, grated tomato, onion, garlic, parsley, and olive oil. Covered cooking softens the vegetables, then an uncovered simmer reduces the tomato and oil mixture around them. Bring crusty bread for the sauce, or serve the dish beside grilled meat, fish, Greek salad, rice, or quinoa when green beans need more substance than a quick steam.
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Creamed Spinach with Mascarpone

With five minutes of prep and five minutes of cooking, Creamed Spinach with Mascarpone turns 12 ounces of fresh spinach into four servings. Heavy cream, dehydrated onion, dehydrated garlic, and mascarpone form the sauce as the spinach wilts in a skillet over medium-low heat. Serve it warm with steak, pork chops, chicken, or salmon when a classic green side needs a richer texture without a long ingredient list.
Get the Recipe: Creamed Spinach with Mascarpone

